MARINE MOLLUSCA OF THE UNITED STATES. 167 
3. C. TRIDENTATA, Say. Figs. 424, 425. 
( Venericardia.) Journ. Philad. Acad., v. 216, Am. Conch. t. 40. 
Shell suborbicular, subequilateral, thick and ponderous, with 
about eighteen convex ribs, crossed by concentric elevated lines ; 
within the margin is deeply crenate; hinge with two diverging 
teeth, separated by a large cavity in one valve, and in the other 
a single, large, triangular, recurved tooth, closing into tke cavity. 
Length 6.5, height 6 mill. 
South Carolina. 
This is a somewhat doubtful species, and appears to have been 
described from a single specimen, which was possibly young and 
the hinge not perfect. Can it be the young of C. Novangliz? 
Conrad has made a genus ** Pleuromeris” for his C. tridentata, a 
fossil shell which is not specifically identical with Say’s species, 
although it belongs apparently to the same group. 
Spurious and Doubtful Species. 
C. INCRASSATA, Sowb., Conrad, Mar. Conch., is an East Indian 
species. 
C. (CARDITAMERA) Frortpana, Conrad, Fossil Shells, 12. 1887. 
Inhabits Key West and Tampa Bay, Florida, but I think it has 
not been detected on the Atlantic coast, although it is included in 
Stimpson’s Catalogue. 
VENERICARDIA ORIBRARIA, Say, cover of Am. Conch., pt. 5. 
A single specimen from the coast of New Jersey. Say writes 
“‘can this be a variety of the borealis of Conrad? Having but a 
single specimen, I cannot determine this question.” 
Family LUCINID. 
Animal with mantle-lobes open below, and having one or two 
siphonal orifices behind; foot elongated, cylindrical, or ligulate, 
protruded at the base of the shell; gills one (or two) on each side, 
large and thick, oval; mouth and palpi usually minute. 
The Lucinide are distributed chiefly in the tropical and tem- 
perate seas, upon sandy and muddy bottoms, from the sea-shore 
to the greatest habitable depths. 
Synopsis of Genera. 
Sheil orbicular, white; umbones depressed; lunule distinct ; margins smooth 
or minutely crenulated ; ligament oblique, semi-internal; hinge teeth 2.2, 
Jaterals 1-1 and 2-2, or obsolete; muscular impressions rugose, anterior 
